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Cafe: |
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Austin Bar and Cafe:
Fairly
basic inside with painted walls, subtle lighting--in other
words it is dark and a loud, loud jukebox belting out Canto
pop hits, you will not find many Westerners here. Instead
the tables are full of local Chinese drinkers, playing dice,
knocking back buckets of beer, in a cacophony of noise,
smoke and laughter.
Address:
1 Austin Avenue
Tsim Sha Tsui
Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2366 2712
TW Cafe:
This secluded cafe located in Central is a fun place to
relax with a coffee. The interior is clean and bright, allowing
ample room for the ten or so customers that can be seated
at any one time. Breakfast
is the best deal so if you are staying in the vicinity and
like a big meal at the start of the day--or the end, depending
on your particular nocturnal habits--then this is a great
diner for stocking up on energy.
Address:
2 Queen Victoria Street
Central Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2522 9795, Fax :
+852 2710 7626
Café Gypsy:
The Café Gypsy is located near the mosque and right
next to the Mid-levels Escalator, making this open-fronted
establishment a great place to sit and watch the world go
by. The fresh, wooden interior, and a great mural depicting
the wines available add to the French atmosphere in which
to enjoy light meals and the house specialitycrepes
with a multitude of different sauces and fillings, both
sweet and savoury.
Address:
29 Shelley Street
Mid-levels
Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2521 0000, Fax:
+852 2517 6454
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Clubs: |
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Club Dream Moods:
Not
open to the public, Club Dream Moods caters for private
parties. You can hire the whole venue complete with bar,
karaoke, kitchen and disco, and party till late safe in
the knowledge that no unwelcome guest will spoil the mood
with loud talk, brazen behaviour and poor dancing.
Address:
24-30 Ice House Street
Central Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2525 6414, Fax:
+852 2521 6486
La
Bamba:
A bit of a pick-up joint, this bar is packed with middle-aged
men on the hunt, supplemented by groups of lads hoping to
get lucky. Harmless and fun, the big boppy La Bamba is not
somewhere to go on a date, rather the place to find one.
The music is typical of most Wanchai discos, a blend of
Filipino house, techno and trance. Not that people come
here for the fancy tunes!
Address:
20 Luard Road
Wanchai, Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2866 8706
Westworld/Manhattan:
Predominantly a Chinese disco which is popular with students,
this is a fairly anonymous, large, high-tech disco with
the lights, the beat, and the beautiful dancers. You need
to look smart to get in and no untidy dressers get past
the security personnel, unless you are famous of course.
Thursday night is "ladies' night", which really
means "lads"' night, because the lads come for
the ladies.
Address:
Renaissance Harbor View, 1 Harbor Road
Wanchai, Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2824 0523
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Bars, Pubs & Tavern: |
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The Bar:
Added,
it seems, almost as an afterthought to the cafe, The Bar
is a small hotel bar with a "ye olde world" look
made up of a wood-panelled bar counter, well-made wooden
tables and chairs, and subdued lighting. Busy
over lunch, this place tends to quieten down after 10pm.
The crowd is a mix of hotel guests and others who like a
quiet drink without a tinkling piano or a crooning three-piece
band in the background.
Address:
3/F, Ritz-Carlton, 3 Connaught Road
Central Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2877 6666, Fax:
+852 2845 3910
Big
Apple Pub & Disco:
This late-night pub and disco is usually still thumping
at 6am. The bar is not that great, but if you want to strut
your stuff until breakfast, The Big Apple offers average
hip-hop and techno as well as a band twice a week. No cover
charge means that this place is popular, and the dance floor
gets unbelievably packed on Sunday afternoons, so watch
out!
Address:
LG/F, 20 Luard Road
Wanchai, Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2529 3461
Blue
Kingdom:
This basement bar offers cheap beer, Thai food, and very
blue lighting, which gives the spooky impression of drinking
under the ocean. As
with many basement bars, this one is spacious with three
main drinking areas, one of which is mysteriously referred
to as the VIP room, even though it looks just like an extension
to the main drinking area but with more comfortable chairs.
All three areas rock to a jukebox, and dice and darts are
available from behind the bar.
Address:
16 Chatham Court
Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2736 1369
Brewery
Tap Pub:
What a great dealrunning from Sunday to Friday between
5pm and 9pm, you can eat as much Nepalese curry as you like
for HKD50! Great food, plus an exhaustive range of draught
bitters, lagers and bottled beers, makes this a top Hong
Kong drinking hole. The interior is fashioned around a British
pub, with wooden tables and bar chairs, and the terrace
outside allows you space to relax and enjoy the flamenco
guitarists entertaining diners at the restaurant opposite.
Address:
66-72 Paterson Street, A-D, G/F
Fashion Walk, Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2576 2075, Fax:
+852 2834 5038
Bull
and Bear Pub:
The Bull and Bear is situated in the heart of business land,
where financiers, bankers, lawyers, and stockbrokers come
after work and discuss matters of economics and trade. Loud
and smoky in the evenings, with a big screen television
in the corner, this joint tends to fill with regulars rather
than tourists. This
place claims to be the oldest British-style pub in Hong
Kong, and it does well in replicating the British climate
with fierce air-conditioning all year round!
Address:
G/F, Hutchinson House, 10 Harcourt Road
Central Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2525 7436
California
Bar:
This well-established bar for the young and trendy is a
great place to catch someone's eyespace is at a premium,
so striking up a conversation, despite the noise, is never
difficult. Last orders for food is at 10:30pm, and no lunch
is served on Sundays, but drinking goes on until 5am over
the weekends. The drinks are frighteningly expensive but
if you want to mix with wild young things, this is the place.
Address:
G/F, California Tower
24-26 Lan Kwai Fong
Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2521 1345
Chin
Chin Bar:
So dark, you could develop photos in the hushed, stylish
darkness of the Chin Chin Bar. Definitely a place for secret
rendezvous and illicit gatherings. A large wooden Buddha-like
carving welcomes you into the plush, stylish interior, where
business people languish at the velvet-cushioned bar counter
listening to the snazzy in-house Filipino band.
Address:
AHyatt Regency, 67 Nathan Road
Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong
Phone: +852 2311 1234
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